US unemployment rate breaks historic low streak
What the chart shows
This chart shows the US unemployment rate and the number of consecutive months it has remained below 4%. In the top pane, the red line shows periods when the unemployment rate is below 4%; the blue line represents the rate at above 4%.
The bottom pane represents the number of consecutive months the unemployment rate has remained below 4%. We can see that the most recent streak has just ended, marking the longest such streak since 1970. The only other time the rate stayed below 4% for a longer period was in the 1950s.
Behind the data
Throughout history, there has been a trend that once the unemployment rate breaks a long streak below 4%, a recession follows. This was true in 1949, 1953, 1957, 1970, 2001 and 2020. We have also seen that once the jobless rate rises above 4%, it often spikes much higher (see 1953 and 1970). Given that ‘maximum employment’ is one of the Fed’s two mandates, we can expect the central bank to be watching this statistic closely.